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Aero-Propulsive Modeling for eVTOL Aircraft Using Wind Tunnel Testing with Multisine Inputs

Benjamin M. Simmons, Eugene A. Morelli, Ronald C. Busan, David B. Hatke, Anthony W. O'Neal

2022AIAA AVIATION 2022 Forum13 citationsDOI

Abstract

View Video Presentation: https://doi.org/10.2514/6.2022-3603.vid A novel approach for modeling the aero-propulsive characteristics of an electric vertical takeoff and landing (eVTOL) aircraft was developed and demonstrated in wind tunnel testing. The approach was applied to the NASA LA-8 tandem tilt-wing eVTOL aircraft, using an efficient, hybrid experiment design composed of a static I-optimal response surface design for slowly-varying test variables, and dynamic orthogonal phase-optimized multisine excitations for the control surfaces and electric propulsors. Both the static and dynamic experiment designs were executed simultaneously to collect informative data for model identification. Statistically-weighted multivariate orthogonal function modeling was used to combine local modeling results computed in the frequency domain using data collected with dynamic excitations operating on the control effectors to form an aggregate aero-propulsive model. The final identified model exhibited good predictive capability when compared to validation data acquired separately from the data used to develop the model. The required test time using these new techniques was reduced by at least a factor of five compared to previous static wind tunnel testing for the LA-8 aircraft, while providing more informative data, greater parameterization flexibility, and high-quality models.

Topics & Concepts

Wind tunnelTakeoffAerodynamicsEngineeringFlight testDynamic testingComputer scienceSimulationAutomotive engineeringAerospace engineeringStructural engineeringAerospace and Aviation TechnologyComputational Fluid Dynamics and AerodynamicsAdvanced Aircraft Design and Technologies
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